A Texas appeals panel won't let a nursing home out of claims that a patient received a head and brain injury that later led to his death, saying that while the plaintiff's expert report is "not a model of clarity," it nonetheless is supported by facts and indicates how the home allegedly breached the standard of care.
A three-member panel of the National Labor Relations Board has ordered Absolute Healthcare to reinstate a worker fired in August 2020, affirming an earlier finding by an NLRB judge that the company had unlawfully fired her for engaging in unionizing activity.
A group of Colorado investors is alleging that a Missouri-based dispensary and its founders defrauded them of more than $700,000 in funds by locking them out of the running of the dispensary and refusing to hand over shares in exchange for the funds.
The governor and attorney general of Kansas are asking a federal judge to throw out the remaining claims in a suit by a cannabis distributor who alleges a state statute banning the sale of certain types of hemp violates the U.S. Constitution's Commerce Clause, saying there is nothing about the law, or his claims, that impact interstate commerce.
A California federal judge has thrown out a proposed class action from a former U.S. military service member alleging F. Hoffmann-La Roche Inc. and its affiliates failed to warn the U.S. government that their antimalarial drug could have permanent psychiatric side effects, finding that his claims are blocked by the laws of New Jersey, where Roche was based when he was prescribed the drug.